An itinerant project in which a major portion of the artist's private collection of about 7000 books is made available for public use. It is an open source of information and to create new affinities. Contemporary Inaki Garmendia presents two new video works.
The Martha Rosler Library is a project in which a major portion of the artist's private collection of books is made available for public use. The project was initiated by Martha Rosler and e-flux, in whose space on the Lower East Side in New York it was first opened to the public for a period of six months. At the Frankfurter Kunstverein the presentation of this itinerant project will take a new shape in collaboration with Revolver Verlag, Frankfurt am Main. A book, co-published by Revolver and e-flux, including the full bibliography of Martha Rosler's book collection, will be published to mark the exhibition.
Martha Rosler is one of the most important North American artists today and is a respected figure thanks to her critical writings. Over the years she has built up a large book collection of close to 10.000 volumes, which has functioned as a basis for her reserach in relation to her artistic work, teaching and writing. Over the years the major part of the library has co-existed with Rosler in her Brooklyn home and long ago began encroaching on the available living space. This created the space problem that helped engender the idea of temporarily moving the library - thus giving the public the opportunity to browse the collection. Theory, history, architecture, political journals, poetry, plays, novels and art books inform her collection, but also comics and science fiction, as well as books that arrive, not out of personal choice, but as gifts or found objects, or even books chosen for their strangeness.
A personal library represents the private sphere of an individual, her way of acquiring and combining knowledge. Accumulation is the result of an intellectual inquiry that takes place in parallel with a more random search, which can lead us to unexpected textual, and therefore mental, spaces. The Martha Rosler Library, which consists of about 7000 of the artist’s books, offers the visitor an opportunity to approach this open source of information with her or his own interests and to create new affinities and connections between the elements of the library that add to more than the sum of knowledge contained in it.
The intention is, through the summer period, to activate the library, inviting visitors to engage in readings and attend talks as well as to know more about the work and methodology of Martha Rosler, one of the most acute critical observers of our present time. In this connection Jessica Silverman, student at the California College of Arts, will be a guest in the Residency Program of the Frankfurter Kunstverein in order to organise events, talks and workshops in and relating to the library.
Martha Rosler lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She teaches at Rutgers University in New Jersey and travels widely to give talks. She has had numerous solo exhibitions worldwide and has been represented internationally in renowned exhibitions, such as Documenta and Manifesta. Moreover, she has published numerous books.
The Martha Rosler Library is a project by e-flux. In collaboration with Revolver Verlag it is presented in Germany for the first time at the Frankfurter Kunstverein. The project has been realised with kind support from Sparkassen-Kulturstiftung Hessen-Thuringen and the 1822-Stiftung.
Speaking of Others is a two-year project platform inviting international initiatives to the Frankfurter Kunstverein.
with kind support from:
Kulturstiftung des Bundes
Contemporary
Inaki Garmendia
June 6 - July 2 2006
Inaki Garmendia is one of the three winners of the Visual Arts Prize, which the Basque government award every second year to the production of contemporary art. In the framework of Speaking of Others, the Frankfurter Kunstverein will present two new video works by the artist: “Red Light / Straight Edge“ (2005) and “Izarra“ (2005). Pop cultural themes play an important role in his work, as well as social identity and the possibility or impossibility of cultural communication. He often uses as a starting point for his work the specific context in which he finds himself. Moreover, he uses music as a wider form of communication as a means to transcend this context.
On June 7 at 7 pm a round table discussion between the artist, the independent Basque curator Peio Aguirre and Chus Marti'nez will take place.
Funded by the German Federal Cultural Foundation
Press conference: June 6, 11 am
Opening: Tuesday, June 6, 7 pm
Finnisage (Barbecue): August 13, 5 pm
Frankfurter Kunstverein
Steinernes Haus am Romerberg,
Markt 44, D-60311 Frankfurt am Main
Opening hours
Tuesday-Sunday, 11 am-7 pm